| Literature DB >> 6088264 |
Abstract
The frequency of Sister Chromatid Exchange (SCE) was determined at low (33 degrees C) and high (40.5 degrees C) temperatures in cell lines derived from FR3T3 rat fibroblast cells after transformation either with Wild-Type Simian Virus 40 (SV40-WT), with an origin-defective SV40 (SV40-ori-), or with the early temperature-sensitive mutant tsA30. Of these cell lines, SV40-WT-, SV40-ori--, and one class of tsA30-transformants (A-type) express the transformed phenotype both at 33 and 40.5 degrees C. The other tsA30-transformants (N-type) revert to a normal phenotype at high temperature. As compared with normal FR3T3 cells, all transformants exhibited, at 33 degrees C, increased numbers of metaphases with high SCE rates. At 40.5 degrees C, all cell lines which expressed a transformed phenotype (SV40-WT, tsA30 type A, SV40-ori-) exhibited substantially increased SCE rates. That this increase was not related to a possible induction of viral replication by BrdU, was proven by Southern blot analysis and by SCE data on SV40-ori--transformed cells. By contrast, no such temperature-induced increase of SCE rates was observed in tsA30-transformants of type N.Entities:
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Year: 1984 PMID: 6088264 DOI: 10.1016/0014-4827(84)90669-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Cell Res ISSN: 0014-4827 Impact factor: 3.905